Russian president Putin allowing Snowden to live in Russia is no surprise. They are, after all, communists. In Moscow Diary Velijko Micunovic, the first Hungarian ambassador to the Soviet Union, wrote “…for the Russians a conciliatory attitude is a sign of weakness” and “the Russians look on any agreement between them and another country as not having any special or lasting significance” – an understatement of epochal proportions. That’s not just his opinion. It is official Socialist policy commanded by Lenin, compounded by Stalin and maintained by every leader of the Russia to the present.. Even “Gorby”. who proclaimed Glasnost to the world. quietly sent Russian tanks into Lithuania after the wall came down crushing 11 citizens circling their parliament in protest. Micunovic concluded “Nobody, not even Kruschev, can change his spots, and that is why we have in him to deal with the old and the new in one person.” The mantle is passed but it the spots remain. Prior to becoming the latest “elected” president of Russian, Putin was head of the KGB -the most repressive intelligence apparatus in the world –and now, apparently, confident of our own president.
I smell something rotten about Snowden. He openly admitted he signed on at NSA with the intent of disclosing sources and methods that keep Americans safe. That is aiding and abetting the enemy. That is treason. The only remaining question is who influenced him to do so. In Russia “Snowdens” are known as “useful idiots”. The KGB teaches their intelligence officers infiltration of foreign bureaucracies and intelligence agencies. Prior to being deported in the ‘50s, the KGB agent sent to America to organize the American Communist Party testified before Congress he was particularly successful recruiting within the State Department. They were also successful manipulating the humanitarian tendencies of foreign “intelligentsia” to serve the Socialist cause. These intelligentsia are affectionately known by their KGB handlers as “useful idiots” or “fellow travelers.” Historically these are the first to be liquidated when the Socialist state is established. Their first successful operation occurred prior to World War II when the KGB forerunner, the NKVD, organized an “Innocents Club” promoting such innocuous sounding Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) as “The World Committee for the Relief of the Victims of German Fascism.” This “humanitarian” organization published the Brown Book on the Hitler Terror and the Burning of the Reichstag. Although the great physicist Albert Einstein was credited with its’ authorship and being president of the Committee (much to his surprise) it was actually written by Willi Munzenberg – “the great virtuoso of Comintern propaganda.” This cleverly disguised lie was compared by the world media to Thomas Paine’s Common Sense. Not coincidentally, Gordievsky says, Munzenberg’s predecessor did the same with The Protocols of the Elders of Israel which fomented the European-wide pogroms against Jews. That masterpiece of lies is still being used today to justify anti-Semitism. In KGB: The Inside Story by Christopher Andrew and former highly placed KGB officer Oleg Gordievsky, Gordievsky describes fellow travelers (ideologically aligned foreign citizens) who are easily seduced not by the brutal reality of communism but by the myth image of the socialist millennium: “This myth image was so powerful that it proved capable of surviving blatant evidence to the contrary.” The former American correspondent in Moscow William C. White’s observed of the naivete’ among American visitors to Russia: “They are wildly enthusiastic over all they see [and hear] but not always logical: they were enthusiastic before they came and their visit only doubly convinces them. A schoolteacher from Brooklyn, on a tour of a newspaper plant, saw a machine which did wonders with the paper that was fed to it. ‘Really, that is remarkable,’ she commented. ‘Such an amazing invention could be produced only in a country like yours, where labor is free, unexploited and working for one end. I shall write a book about what I have seen.’ She was a trifle embarrassed when she walked to the rear and saw ‘Made in Brooklyn, N.Y.” emblazoned on the printing press.” If the Russians are anything they are Master Liars. After a few days of massive bombardment on a Chechen-occupied city in the ‘90s, the Chechen guerrilla leader asked for a truce. He offered to surrender the city if the Russian general would allow the guerrillas to leave thus saving the remaining civilians. The Russian general agreed and promised a safe corridor out of town. As the guerrillas massed within the evacuation route, the general opened up with everything he had. After the bloodbath he joyfully exclaimed to the astonished mayor “I can’t believe he trusted me!” They really don’t change their spots.